Browsing by Author "Beningfield, S J"
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- ItemOpen AccessEmergency room arteriography: An updated digital technology(2007) Ball, C G; Moodley, S; Beningfield, S J; Navsaria, P H; Nicol, ABackground: Emergency room arteriography (ERA) is a safe, accurate, simple and costeffective method of defining arterial injuries. Limitations include the difficulty of evaluating limb vasculature distal to the suspected site of injury. Statscan is a novel, low-dose digital X-ray machine that can rapidly obtain a whole body image inasingle scan. Our goal was to evaluate the role of Statscan technology in ERA. Methods: A 24 month retrospective review of all patients who underwent a Statscan assisted ERA at the Groote Schuur Hospital Trauma Unit was completed. Indications for ERA included a hemodynamically stable patient with hard signs of a vascular injury in conjunction with the clinical assessment of a threatened limb. Contraindications encompassed instability, massive bleeding or a rapidly expanding hematoma. Results: Ten patients underwent Statscan assisted ERA of their lower limbs. Eight had cold, pulseless limbs with impaired neurological examinations. Common femoral, superficial femoral and popliteal artery lacerations were displayed. Three patients had no identifiable injury and were observed. Seven patients underwent operative management for threatened limbs. Two had Statscan evidence of arterial emboli distal to the site of injury leading to further exploration and distal embolectomy. Conclusions: Statscan ERA is safe, rapid, simple and accurate. It has the advantage of providing arteriography distal to the site of injury. This directly altered patient care in 20% of cases, primarily by detecting distal arterial emboli. Thirty percent of patients with normal ERA also avoided an unnecessary operation. This study demonstrates a new role for Statscan technology.
- ItemOpen AccessThe new DEAL - a novel technique using a double-entry access loop to facilitate bilateral intrahepatic biliary access for complex intrahepatic stones(Health and Medical Publishing Group, 2006) Krige, J E J; Beningfield, S JThe management of patients with primary intrahepatic stones may be complex as the natural history is frequently complicated by further episodes of cholangitis after initial treatment because of residual or recurrent intrahepatic stones or strictures.1 Curative segmental or lobar hepatic resection of atrophic segments and diseased ducts is possible in only the 20% of patients with localised stones or strictures.2 Complete stone removal by resection is therefore not feasible in the majority of patients with bilateral lobar stones and strictures. Patients who subsequently develop cholangitis pose a major operative risk if secondary biliary cirrhosis, portal hypertension or the atrophy-hypertrophy complex has occurred.3 Treatment of recurrent stones and strictures via the percutaneous transhepatic biliary route is successful in only 70% of patients.3 In order to avoid these hazards, to reduce the incidence of incomplete operative stone removal and to facilitate extraction of recurrent intrahepatic stones, we have used a multidisciplinary approach in complex hepatolithiasis, combining resection of atrophic liver segments with a modified hepaticojejunostomy incorporating permanent access for interventional radiological procedures via a jejunal access loop.
- ItemOpen AccessOther manifestations of HIV vasculopathy(Health and Medical Publishing Group, 2009) Naidoo, N G; Beningfield, S JDescriptions of the numerous manifestations of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection affecting almost every organ system have abounded in recent publications. Multiple radiological, clinical and postmortem reports have recorded the cerebral, pulmonary, cardiac, renal, rheumatological and gastrointestinal pathologies in HIV-infected individuals, ranging from the bizarre to the mundane. Large-vessel HIV-related vascular manifestations have previously been reported in the surgical literature. We describe and review the manifestations of HIV-associated vasculopathy as it pertains to the cerebral, cardiovascular, mesenteric and renal circulations.
- ItemOpen AccessPrimary hydatid cysts of the pancreas(2005) Krige, J E; Mirza, K M; Bornman, P C; Beningfield, S JPancreatic involvement by hydatid disease is uncommon. Establishing a precise diagnosis may be difficult because the presenting symptoms and findings of investigations may be similar to other more commonly encountered cystic lesions of the pancreas. We report 4 patients with primary hydatid cysts in the head of the pancreas. The records of all patients treated for hydatid disease from 1980 to 2000 were reviewed. During the study period a total of 280 patients were treated, 4 of whom had hydatid disease involving only the pancreas. The 4 patients (3 women, 1 man) ranged in age from 17 to 60 years. Three patients presented with jaundice, abdominal pain and weight loss, 2 with hepatomegaly and 1 with an epigastric mass. All 4 lesions involved the head of the pancreas and ranged in size from 3 to 10 cm in diameter. In 2 patients the investigations incorrectly suggested a cystic tumour and both underwent pancreaticoduodenectomy. In 2 patients the correct diagnosis allowed local excision to be performed. Hydatid cyst is a rare cause of a cystic mass in the head of the pancreas, but should be included in the differential diagnosis of cystic lesions of the pancreas, especially in endemic areas.
- ItemOpen AccessThe management of complex pancreatic injuries(2005) Krige, J E J; Beningfield, S J; Nicol, A J; Navsaria, PMajor injuries of the pancreas are uncommon, but may result in considerable morbidity and mortality because of the magnitude of associated vascular and duodenal injuries or underestimation of the extent of the pancreatic injury. Prognosis is influenced by the cause and complexity of the pancreatic injury, the amount of blood lost, duration of shock, speed of resuscitation and quality and nature of surgical intervention. Early mortality usually results from uncontrolled or massive bleeding due to associated vascular and adjacent organ injuries. Late mortality is a consequence of infection or multiple organ failure. Neglect of major pancreatic duct injury may lead to life-threatening complications including pseudocysts, fistulas, pancreatitis, sepsis and secondary haemorrhage. Careful operative assessment to determine the extent of gland damage and the likelihood of duct injury is usually sufficient to allow planning of further management. This strategy provides a simple approach to the management of pancreatic injuries regardless of the cause. Four situations are defined by the extent and site of injury: (i) minor lacerations, stabs or gunshot wounds of the superior or inferior border of the body or tail of the pancreas (i.e. remote from the main pancreatic duct), without visible duct involvement, are best managed by external drainage; (ii) major lacerations or gunshot or stab wounds in the body or tail with visible duct involvement or transection of more than half the width of the pancreas are treated by distal pancreatectomy; (iii) stab wounds, gunshot wounds and contusions of the head of the pancreas without devitalisation of pancreatic tissue are managed by external drainage, provided that any associated duodenal injury is amenable to simple repair; and (iv) non-reconstructable injuries with disruption of the ampullary-biliary-pancreatic union or major devitalising injuries of the pancreatic head and duodenum in stable patients are best treated by pancreatoduodenectomy. Internal drainage or complex defunctioning procedures are not useful in the emergency management of pancreatic injuries, and can be avoided without increasing morbidity. Unstable patients may require initial damage control before later definitive surgery. Successful treatment of complex injuries of the head of the pancreas depends largely on initial correct assessment and appropriate treatment. The management of these severe proximal pancreatic injuries remains one of the most difficult challenges in abdominal trauma surgery, and optimal results are most likely to be obtained by an experienced multidisciplinary team.